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Hi there... I just wanted to point out something in your article. You said, "Can a Mormon who believes in magic glasses and golden tablets win the White House?"
I find it strange that you would put this because it sends a message that Mormons are wacky and insane. Look at the Bible. Bible believers believe there was a talking donkey... the red sea was parted by an old man... God wrote 10 commandments in stone with his finger... etc.
Biblical teachings are "wacky" when you look at them from a worldly point of view... so why are Mormons portrayed as weird for their additional beliefs in things that sound just as strange to the unbeliever? I feel it's wrong to send the message you did because people simply won't understand any of the context behind it.
If you met with someone who had never heard of Christianity before and you tried to explain it... he/she would think you're insane. But since most people don't understand what Mormonism really is, it's not really a good idea to bring up complicated/confusing aspects of the faith that would require an additional venue for clarification without providing such a resource to the reader.
Mark
Thanks for the response. Yes.. I know the "wacky" word was of my own
usage. I just feel that the great majority of readers don't take the
time to do what I'm doing so when they read your article... they
think... "Mormons believe in magic glasses and gold tablets? Man..
they're weird." So, they walk away with an opinion and most never take
the time to really find out what that really means. Those magic glasses
are in reference to the Urim and Thummim... and if you're a Bible
believer, you believe in. The Bible is just mute about what exactly the
Urim and Thummim really is for or what it looks like. Mormons just have
an explanation for it but referring to it as "magic glasses"
inadvertently makes people think weird things. Trust me.. having been a
Mormon for 19 years... I've heard it all and have seen the reactions of
people when certain words are used to describe something in our faith...
you know.. like "magic underwear"... which we don't believe in. I just
thought it would have been best to have referred to them a the Urim and
Thummim instead of "magic glasses". After all... the term "magic"
removes God from their usage and instead implies weird sorcery or
ungodly powers when in reality we believe they are a tool of God for use
by man. Just a thought.. that's all.
The entire Fox news network and the spawn of William Kristol have done their best to convince the entire country that Enlightenment ideals--secular government being one--are quaint, arrogant, classist. Do any of them even know when the Enlightenment was? And is it so terrible for me to expect them to know? As Jon Weiner indicates, anti-intellectualism is often the the harbinger of a nasty societal shift. Consider that our last president almost didn't get the job because he had the temerity, the perversity, to accept a scholarship at Oxford. And our last president, well.....
Want a detailed description of Stone's J-Curve in action? Pick up Barbara Tuchman's "A Distant Mirror" and read the gruesome introduction. And since Will quoted two eminent scholars and I've only quoted one, well, I offer the assessment of Harold Bloom: "We are entering a new theocratic age."
(there, will. I'm two for two.)
I'm going to sound like an annoying quibbler, but I must take issue with a few of your statements. Regarding "in God we trust," you can find the following information on the website for the US Treasury:
"The motto IN GOD WE TRUST was placed on United States coins largely because of the increased religious sentiment existing during the Civil War. Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase received many appeals from devout persons throughout the country, urging that the United States recognize the Deity on United States coins."
The founding fathers had absolutely nothing to do with it; horrific carnage and a complete breakdown of civil society was the impetus.
As for being "endowed by a creator." It is crucial to remember that all of western society had, up to that point, been structured on the belief that God himself appointed all men to their station, that there was a divine decision involved in finding yourself in the first, second, or third estate, a member of royalty or a serf--in other words, that God had established the status quo and all those French revolutionaries were demented for thinking that they could alter it. This was still a time when commoners thought that a touch from the King or Queen could banish disease (Samuel Johnson was one of the last Englishmen granted the honor, to cure scrofula). The founders were very consciously overturning/co-opting that mode of thinking by arguing that freedom was the divine birthright of all men. (Slavery, of course, is problematic.)
And the founding fathers may have written of their own personal religiosity, but that is a far cry from advocating national observance. And I think that they knew that.
Your right on the "In God we trust" thing. Sorry for the misinformation. The point I'm trying to make, however, was that no one can say for sure that the founding fathers believed that religion should not have a role in Government. I do believe in the separation church and state, but I'm afraid that people try to overstep boundaries on both sides of the argument. I think that it is embarrasing that Romney has to explain his religious doctrines to become President. I understand that people want to make sure that his church will not influence his Presidency, but he's already said that it wont. Can he do anymore than that? It's obvious that Christian Conservatives (mostly extremists) just want to put him on the "hot seat" to pick at doctrinal issues which would be impossible to explain in that amount of time and through that type of forum. Sorry, I'm kind of ranting now. Back to the article. Why did he bash Romney and Mormonism to make his point about religion in government. Romney seems to be a victim of his point (which is valid by the way), and Mormonism has always stated that members should always obey, honor, and sustain the law. (LDS 12th article of faith) This would apply to any mormon as President and the Constitution would fall under the law part. I'm not the brightest person in the world, so if I'm just missing the connection, please clarify.
I didn't say Mormons are wacky--or at least not uniquely so. I said religious fundamentalists are wacky--so wacky that they've demanded Mitt Romney balance the unsupportable claims of Mormonism against the equally unsupportable claims of mainstream Christianity.
I don't care what Romney believes, really, but I'd be more comfortable knowing that he doesn't believe in the literal truth of the Book of Mormon (which, yeah, I've read). Bush's fundamentalist certainties drove us to war; in the confusion following his massive and catastrophic failures as a president, evangelicals are looking for a replacement: Romney could be their boy--if he can persuade them he's more fundamental in his faith than, say, Huckabee. But he won't be able to do that. The snakehandlers will continue to pick at Mormons; the rest of us more mainstream believers will be put off by the intrusion of faith in politics. Back to the First Amendment.
But don't let a man's personal faith be the issue of the day or we will have to add bigotry to that long list that is found above.
Can anyone who believes in walking on water and raising the dead win the White House? I think you've failed to ask the same questions about any other world religion, major or not. What a perfect example of a religious test!
I am glad that you don't care what Romney believes. From the article, however, it look like you did, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. In the end, I agree with what Mike wrote. I leave it at that, unless you have anything to add.
Except that he is, just an ecumenical version.
(I wrote a bit about this yesterday for the Daily Briefing.)